Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Caries, periodontal disease, and occlusal wear were studied in rats with short-term (one month) and long-term (12 months) untreated alloxan diabetes and in age-matched control rats. Standard laboratory diet and water were given ad libitum. Streptococcus mutans and lactobacilli were naturally occurring inhabitants of the oral bacterial flora. In short-term diabetic rats, there was less dental plaque in the gingival region of the first mandibular molar than in control rats, but the density of leukocytes in the junctional epithelium was increased. Interdentally, the gingival papillae were intact, and the prevalence of foreign material was as low as for the controls. No caries lesions were seen. The proportion of the oral flora which was lactobacilli was positively correlated with the blood glucose level. In long-term diabetic rats, there was more periodontal breakdown than in the age-matched control rats. The periodontal breakdown was always associated with large interdental impactions of foreign material. Caries was seen only in the diabetic rats and in sites with interdental impactions. The decay was shown to start in the cementum at the cemento-enamel junction. The amount of alveolar bone loss, but not the amount of dental caries, was related to the degree of hyperglycemia. Occlusal wear of the molars in long-term diabetic rats was significantly increased as compared with that in the controls.
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PMID:Root surface caries and periodontal disease in long-term alloxan diabetic rats. 345 25

This study compared the periodontal and caries experience of young patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) with a nondiabetic population of the same age. The plaque scores of children with IDDM were statistically higher. The caries experience of a child with closely monitored IDDM and a family history of diabetes was significantly lower than that of a child with IDDM and no such family history, even though the gingival and plaque indexes of both children were the same.
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PMID:Periodontal and caries experience in children with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 346 34

Gruppuso et al. [Gruppuso, P.A., Gordon, P., Kahn, C. R., Cornblath, M., Zeller, W. P. & Schwartz, R. (1984) N. Engl. J. Med. 311, 629-634] have recently described a family in which hyperproinsulinemia is inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern, suggesting a structural abnormality in the proinsulin molecule as the basis for this disorder. However, unlike two previous kindreds with a similar syndrome, the serum proinsulin-like material in this family did not appear to be an intermediate conversion product but instead behaved like normal human proinsulin by several criteria. To further characterize this disorder we isolated and sequenced the insulin gene of the propositus. Leukocyte DNA was cloned into lambda-WES and recombinants containing the two insulin alleles, lambda MD41 and lambda MD51, were isolated by plaque hybridization. DNA sequencing of lambda MD51 showed that it contained the normal coding sequence for human preproinsulin. Sequence analysis of lambda MD41, however, revealed a single nucleotide substitution in the codon for residue 10 of proinsulin (CAC----GAC) that predicts the exchange of aspartic acid for histidine in the insulin B chain region. This mutation was also found in an insulin allele cloned from a second affected family member (propositus's father). These results, along with the linkage analysis of Elbein et al. [Elbein, S.C., Gruppuso, P., Schwartz, R., Skolnick, M. & Permutt, M.A. (1985) Diabetes 34, 821-824], strongly implicate this mutation as the cause of the hyperproinsulinemia in this family. Inhibition of the conversion of proinsulin to insulin may be related to altered folding and/or self-association properties of the [Asp10]proinsulin.
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PMID:A mutation in the B chain coding region is associated with impaired proinsulin conversion in a family with hyperproinsulinemia. 347 Jul 84

Many Authors agree about a relationship between higher estroprogestinic levels and periodontal inflammation. This study tries to define the relationship between oral contraceptives (OC) and specific gingival signs, like bleeding and plaque. 51 women (15 to 19 years) were studied while using OC, and 36 of the same age group were studied as controls. Only women who had no past medical history of hormone imbalance, diabetes mellitus or dentures were selected. The patients were examined at the beginning of the study and were assigned scores related to the amount of plaque, inflammation and pockets (Loe and Silness gingival index). Use of alcoholic beverages, medications, tobacco, and caffeine were also noted. The only significant difference between the control group and the women taking OC was cigarette smoking: 52.9% versus 41.6% respectively. The average time of treatment was 11.5+5 months. No changes were observed in the buccal and lingual mucosa in both populations. The plaque indexes were very close. The bleeding was significantly higher in the group using OC; same for the gingival index. Pockets deeper than 2 mm were present in 33.3% of the treated women, versus 13.8% of the controls. The results point out a significant direct relationship between OC and gingival inflammation after several months of use. It possible that by prolonging the length of the study the gingival lesions would become even more significant.
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PMID:[Drugs with contraceptive actions and periodontal status. Epidemiological survey]. 347 42

Angiography has associated morbidity and mortality, but it is the road map for the vascular surgeon. Can blood vessels be safely operated on without first obtaining an angiogram? It was the purpose of this retrospective analysis to ascertain the need for and value of carotid angiography in patients with amaurosis fugax. Twenty-eight patients (18 men and 10 women) with an average age of 66.4 years (range 58 to 71 years) had histories consistent with amaurosis fugax and were operated on for it. They did not have a history of transient ischemic attacks or stroke. Histories were reviewed for cardiac disease, smoking, hypertension, and diabetes. All patients were studied by noninvasive methods (bidirectional Doppler analysis, oculoplethysmography, carotid phonoangiography, and real-time B-mode ultrasonography), cerebral computerized tomographic scan, and angiography. Nineteen of the 28 patients (11 men and 8 women) had fluorescein angiography. All preoperative computerized tomographic scans were negative. Findings on real-time B-mode ultrasonography suggested significant ulcerated plaque in all of the patients. Angiography could only confirm ulcerated areas in 17 of the 28 patients. Of the patients studied by fluorescein angiography, 17 of 19 (10 men and 7 women) had confirmed embolic lesions. Surgery confirmed ulcerative lesions in all of the 28 patients. Results of this study indicate that if a patient has a history consistent with amaurosis fugax, a negative computerized tomographic scan, and a positive real-time B-mode ultrasonogram, an angiogram may not be necessary.
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PMID:Carotid endarterectomy for amaurosis fugax without angiography. 352 33

To clarify the patho-etiologic factors of Japanese myocardial infarction, a comparative pathological study of myocardial infarction in the Osaka, Akita, Wakayama, and Hokkaido districts, and an extensive histopathological study of 94 autopsy cases with acute myocardial infarct (AMI) in less than 4 weeks at Osaka were carried out. Although AMI in Akita was highly complicated by hypertension, AMI in Osaka was associated with a history of diabetes mellitus and hypercholesterolemia, especially in the young generation (under 59 years of age); hypercholesterolemia was related to the occurrence of AMI. Moreover, in spite of increases in transmural myocardial infarct (TMI) in Osaka, Hokkaido and Wakayama, Akita showed an equal ratio of TMI and subendcardial myocardial infarct. In AMI in Osaka, significant stenosis (more than 75% stenosis) of the coronary artery was of the same grade between the proximal and distal portions in the epicardial coronary artery. AMI in Akita, however, showed more severe stenosis in the proximal than the distal portion. A high incidence (88.3%) of thrombosis formation corresponding to the site of infarction was observed in AMI in Osaka. Moreover, ruptured atheromatous plaques were identified as being responsible for 62.6% of the coronary thrombosis cases, and a high incidence (70.0%) of foamy cell infiltration was disclosed. Thus, it can be concluded that ruptured atheromatous plaque is a major factor in the progression of coronary atherosclerosis and/or thrombosis, which might be due to the process of plaque softening.
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PMID:Histopathological study of acute myocardial infarction and pathoetiology of coronary thrombosis: a comparative study in four districts in Japan. 359 79

Observations are described in seven patients (four women and three men) aged 38 to 76 years who had had diabetes mellitus for 25 years or more. Five had been treated with insulin, and two had been treated with diet and oral hypoglycemic agents only. Four patients had had bilateral leg amputations, one angina pectoris, and two left-sided congestive heart failure. Two died suddenly, two died of acute myocardial infarction, two died of infection, and one died from trauma. Transmural left ventricular scars were present in five patients and transmural necrosis in three patients. All seven patients had two or more major epicardial coronary arteries narrowed more than 75 percent in cross-sectional area by atherosclerotic plaque. Of 353 segments, each 5 mm, from the four major epicardial coronary arteries from the seven patients (mean 50 per patient), 53 (15 percent) were narrowed up to 25 percent in cross-sectional area, 116 (33 percent) were narrowed 26 to 50 percent, 110 (31 percent) were narrowed 51 to 75 percent, 66 (19 percent) were narrowed 76 to 95 percent, and eight (2 percent) were narrowed 96 to 100 percent. What allowed such long survival in these seven patients is unclear. It is clear that all had severe coronary arterial narrowing by atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Diabetes mellitus for 25 years or more. Analysis of cardiovascular findings in seven patients studied at necropsy. 374 85

All segments of clinically significant stenosis in the coronary arteries of 54 men with stable angina were categorised according to the position of the plaques (eccentric or concentric) and the presence or absence of a pool of extracellular lipid. In the group as a whole, stenosis of greater than 50% by diameter was caused by concentric fibrous plaques in 48% of lesions, by concentric lipid plaques in 28%, by eccentric fibrous plaques in 12%, and by eccentric lipid plaques in 12%. In addition, 43 of the 54 patients had one or more stenoses with multiple channels (recanalisation). Eccentric plaques with an arc of normal vessel wall occupying more than 16% of the circumference of the residual lumen were considered to have a vasospastic potential and made up 15% of all lesions with stenosis of greater than 50% by diameter. Forty four per cent of plaques causing stenosis between 30% and 50% by diameter were eccentric and retained a considerable arc of normal media. These lesions were often in series with segments of higher grade stenosis that did not have an arc of normal media. The overall frequency of plaque types gave no indication of the proportions of different plaque types within an individual. In 15% of patients all the plaques causing greater than 50% diameter stenosis were fibrous and in 13% of patients all the plaques were of the lipid type. Most patients had mixtures of all plaque types in varying proportions. Plaques with a large pool of lipid were not found in 33% of patients whereas they formed greater than 90% of the plaques in 9% of patients. No segments of stenosis > 50% by diameter with a vasospastic potential were found in 44% of the patients but one or more such plaques was present in the the remaining 56%. Three patients (6%) each had five separate segments of stenosis with a vasospastic potential. The results indicate that even in a population of men with stable angina in whom diabetes is excluded the distribution of types of atheromatous lesions is very heterogenous.
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PMID:Morphological characteristics of clinically significant coronary artery stenosis in stable angina. 380 Dec 41

233 patients with erysipelas, admitted to the Department of Infectious Diseases, Danderyd Hospital, during a 2-year period were analysed for epidemiological, bacteriological and complicating features. Erysipelas was defined clinically as a febrile skin infection with a sudden onset of a red indurated expanding plaque with a distinct border. Common predisposing factors were alcohol abuse, diabetes mellitus and venous insufficiency, and complications were more common among such patients. No seasonal variation was found. 5% of patients with blood culture had streptococcemia (7/149). Erysipelas emerging from an infected ulcer was seen in 52% (122/233) and in 46% of these streptococci were isolated (57/122), 67% of which were of type A (38/57). Staphylococcus aureus was isolated from 59% of ulcerative cases (72/122) and in 3 of them staphylococci were found in the blood.
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PMID:Epidemiological, bacteriological and complicating features of erysipelas. 381 46

The essentiality of chromium (Cr) in animal and human nutrition is now well accepted. In animals, Cr deficiency can cause a diabetic-like state, impaired growth, elevated blood lipids, increased aortic plaque formation, and decreased fertility and longevity. The ability of Cr to potentiate insulin sensitivity has considerable experimental support. In the human, Cr deficiency has been demonstrated unequivocally in only one clinical situation, patients on total parenteral nutrition without added Cr. In such patients, impaired glucose tolerance, hyperglycemia, relative insulin resistance, peripheral neuropathy, and a metabolic encephalopathy have been noted with reversal of the clinical phenomena by Cr repletion. Many studies have been performed to determine whether Cr deficiency may be important in other clinical conditions, namely, diabetes mellitus, pregnant and parous women, and the aged population. Available data indicate that Cr supplementation can improve glucose metabolism in glucose intolerant individuals and decrease the total/HDL cholesterol ratio regardless of the status of glucose tolerance. However, whether Cr supplementation has long-term health benefits is unknown. Further, despite many tantalizing observations, it is still unclear whether Cr deficiency, latent or overt, is common in any human situation other than generalized malnutrition and total parenteral nutrition without added Cr. Technical uncertainties in the analysis of Cr, Cr contamination of food by the use of stainless steel processing equipment and eating utensils, and the lack of a clinically feasible test for Cr deficiency continue to impede progress in Cr research. Nevertheless, there is considerably more clarity as to plasma and urine Cr levels, food and tissue Cr content, and metabolic pathways of Cr metabolism than existed a decade ago. It is expected that progress will accelerate, since critical questions can now be addressed regarding the role of Cr in human nutrition.
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PMID:Clinical and biochemical aspects of chromium deficiency. 388 57


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